![]() |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
Uzak
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Our DVD Price: £15.99 RRP:
Availability In Stock - should be despatched within 24 hours. This product will be dispatched from Guernsey. Delivery times
Earn 75 Bonus Points when you buy this product. More info |
Film Description
Aka Distant. A beautifully-photographed film of melancholia in Istanbul that is regarded as a contemporary masterpiece. The film is concerned with the distance between people, especially two cousins - one man a drifting photographer, the other fresh from the village with a dream of finding work in the city. Winner of the Grand Prix Cannes 2003.
Film Information
| Director | Nuri Bilge Ceylan | ||||
| Starring | Muzaffer Ozdemir, Mehmet Emin Toprak
|
||||
| Genre | World Cinema
|
||||
| Country | Turkey | Language | TURKISH | Year | 2003 |
DVD Extras
Interview with Nuri Bilge Ceylan; Koza (Cocoon) - short film by Ceylan; Behind the scenes footage; Theatrical trailer; Filmographies.
Technical Details
| Certificate | 15 | Length | 105 mins | Label | ART-E | ||
| Cat No | ART280DVD | Format | DVD | Colour | |||
| Region | 2 | Aspect | Enhanced for widescreen TV | ||||
| Subtitles | English. | ||||||
6 Stills
![]() |
![]() |
Share your thoughts and opinions - write a review
Review by Graeme Hobbs on 26th August 2004
Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Uzak/Distant, follows a couple of losers lost in their own respective worlds. Muzaffer Ozdemir plays an established photographer seemingly bored in his work, effectively reducing a high flying creative job to a standard nine to fiver. In one scene, he visits an office to follow through a job. When the editor turns his back to examine the negatives against a window, he thumbs a magazine as if killing time in a launderette. The scene draws out and nothing else happens. Ozdemir drifts around his spacious apartment (a wandering curiosity of rooms that reveal themselves right through the film) alternating between a constant flow of work, at his own casual pace and the casual gratification of sexual pleasure, via faceless prostitutes and his video recorder. Indeed, Ozdemir exists at his own pace playing his own rules.
One tired evening his distant cousin arrives (Mehmit Emin Toprak) from his distant family, needing a place to stay while looking for work in the city. Ozdemir accepts his staying but coldly lays down the house rules.
At first, he has very little to say to his cousin, as the days pass the relationship spreads even thinner, until his only daily enquiry is whether or not he’s found any work. As a result Toprak is forced to find conversation in local cafes, wearing the same clothes he arrived in.
It soon emerges that we are meant to find both men unlikable characters. Ozdemir shuffles about concerned only with himself, taking advantage of others on the sly, while Toprak, having no real energy to find work, spends his time stalking woman or stinking up the flat when Ozdemir is out. Yet watching Uzak, you find yourself genuinely engaged by their movements and concerned for their outcomes.
Both men soon long for the absence of the other but their forced togetherness is equally deserving. Toprak secretly smokes in the lounge, gorging his host’s food, while Ozdemir secretly sprays Top rak’s offensive shoes before throwing them into a cupboard. In a comic sequence, Ozdemir feigns going to bed so he can watch a porno video, while his cousin equally feigns tiredness so he can make a private phone call. He soon finishes the call and returns to the sitting room standing over Ozdemir, who fumbles the controls to change the channel but not before we’ve caught a glimpse of something non terrestrial.
Uzak is beautifully photographed, capturing an Istanbul adrift in heavy snow, a quieting landscape that allows a greater volume between its protagonists and at the same time, emphasizing their own cold remoteness.
Unsurprisingly, Ceylan’s film opts out of an easy reconciliation, favouring a more meditative conclusion that drifts through the mind long after the closing credits.
View more reviews by Graeme Hobbs
![]()
Review by Philip Rashleigh on 23rd August 2004
Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Uzak/Distant, follows a couple of losers lost in their own respective worlds. Muzaffer Ozdemir plays an established photographer seemingly bored in his work, effectively reducing a high flying creative job to a standard nine to fiver. In one scene, he visits an office to follow through a job. When the editor turns his back to examine the negatives against a window, he thumbs a magazine as if killing time in a launderette. The scene draws out and nothing else happens. Ozdemir drifts around his spacious apartment (a wandering curiosity of rooms that reveal themselves right through the film) alternating between a constant flow of work, at his own casual pace and the casual gratification of sexual pleasure, via faceless prostitutes and his video recorder. Indeed, Ozdemir exists at his own pace playing his own rules.
One tired evening his distant cousin arrives (Mehmit Emin Toprak) from his distant family, needing a place to stay while looking for work in the city. Ozdemir accepts his staying but coldly lays down the house rules.
At first, he has very little to say to his cousin, as the days pass the relationship spreads even thinner, until his only daily enquiry is whether or not he’s found any work. As a result Toprak is forced to find conversation in local cafes, wearing the same clothes he arrived in.
It soon emerges that we are meant to find both men unlikable characters. Ozdemir shuffles about concerned only with himself, taking advantage of others on the sly, while Toprak, having no real energy to find work, spends his time stalking woman or stinking up the flat when Ozdemir is out. Yet watching Uzak, you find yourself genuinely engaged by their movements and concerned for their outcomes.
Both men soon long for the absence of the other but their forced togetherness is equally deserving. Toprak secretly smokes in the lounge, gorging his host’s food, while Ozdemir secretly sprays Top rak’s offensive shoes before throwing them into a cupboard. In a comic sequence, Ozdemir feigns going to bed so he can watch a porno video, while his cousin equally feigns tiredness so he can make a private phone call. He soon finishes the call and returns to the sitting room standing over Ozdemir, who fumbles the controls to change the channel but not before we’ve caught a glimpse of something non terrestrial.
Uzak is beautifully photographed, capturing an Istanbul adrift in heavy snow, a quieting landscape that allows a greater volume between its protagonists and at the same time, emphasizing their own cold remoteness.
Unsurprisingly, Ceylan’s film opts out of an easy reconciliation, favouring a more meditative conclusion that drifts through the mind long after the closing credits.
![]()
Hand-picked recommendations of related films
|
|
A young woman wanders a stark industrial landscape in search of fresh purpose. When she meets someone on the sam... More > |
|
|
Dir: Abbas Kiarostami Focusing on an Iranian man's search for a helper with his intended suicide, this is a film of rare intelligence ... More > |
|
|
Dir: Wong Kar-Wai A real delight and a beautiful film created out of love and loneliness. Scene after scene impress themselves upo... More > |
This film is part of the following Customer Film Lists
Hari by Haridas.B
These are some of the films I have seen and loved - Hari
Recommendations from fellow customers
by Satyajit Ray
More films directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
Nuri Bilge Ceylan: The Early Works - Kasaba & Clouds of May
| Special Offers | ||||||||||||||||
|
More Great Offers |
| BestSellers | ||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
| Recommended by MovieMail | ||||||||||
|
A curated collection of the best DVDs
Latest Additions
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
| Just Released |
|
Be Kind Rewind Garage Picnic at Hanging Rock Bill Douglas Trilogy The Boss of It All |
| Coming Soon |
|
You, the Living Im Not There Love in the Time of Cholera Screen Icons: Richard Attenborough Around the World in 80 Gardens |
| Home | Film Catalogue | New Releases | Special Offers | Top 30 | ||
| Film Collections | Film Media | News | Your Account | Help | Become a MovieMail affiliate | ||
For questions or assistance, call us on (+44) 0844 776 0900 or email on enquiries@moviemail-online.co.uk © 2004-2007 MovieMail, Ltd., All Rights Reserved. Find out more about MovieMail |
||
|